Tsatevich defeated Primoz Roglic (LottoNL-Jumbo) in a two-man sprint to the line, as the final two survivors of the day’s break.

Having finished fifth, fourth and seventh in the bunch sprints on stages one, two and six respectively, the Russian rider adopted a new strategy in his quest to win a stage by getting into the day’s break. Once attacks and the difficulty of the hilly final circuit in Barcelona had played its part, only Tsatevich and Mohoric remained to contest the sprint for victory.

Fourteen seconds behind was a peloton featuring Quintana and and all the other GC favourites. Several attacks had been put in earlier in the day in what was quite a hectic stage, but all the favourites ultimately cancelled each other out.

The only change on GC saw Dan Martin (Etixx-QuickStep) move up into a podium place, having gained a second in the intermediate sprint to leapfrog Richie Porte (BMC) into third place.

Chris Froome in action during Stage 7 of the 2016 Volta a Catalunya

Among the most eye-catching attacks were second overall Alberto Contador’s (Tinkoff) speculative dig on the penultimate lap, that Quintana was quick to close down; Tejay van Garderen (BMC), fifth overall overnight, on the final lap, but again could not get a gap; and Chris Froome (Sky) with around 17km, although he was considered too much of a threat for the peloton to let go.

Sharethrough (Mobile)

While these riders all had GC on their mind, there was another host of riders who rode aggressively with the intent of winning the stage. A dangerous group formed with around 15km to go, featuring Joaquim Rodriguez (Katusha), Merhawi Kudus (Dimension Data), Mikel Nieve (Sky) Daniel Navarro (Cofidis), Jarlinson Pantano (IAM Cycling) and Tobias Ludvigsson (Giant-Alpecin).

They managed to get a sizeable gap ahead of the peloton and mopped up many riders dropped from the original break, but were ultimately caught on the final lap when van Garderen’s attack prompted the peloton to accelerate and reel him – and this group – in.